What do you love? Tell Google.

Google quietly rolled out a site this week that lets users tell it what they “love” and produces the results via its array of services, from mapping to online videos.

Users can fill in a box under the question “What do you love?” with a topic such as flowers, and it will show how they can find flowers nearby, videos about flowers, news about flowers, discussion groups about flowers, alerts for flowers and so forth. It’s an effective display of Google’s growing number of services available.

If users are feeling silly or juvenile — as suggested by the New York Times — they can get a kick out of results for “explore poop in 3D” (there is a picture of a turd) and “photos of poop” (a picture of a dog doing its business on a lawn).

What do you love? Tell Google.

Google quietly rolled out a site this week that lets users tell it what they “love” and produces the results via its array of services, from mapping to online videos.

Users can fill in a box under the question “What do you love?” with a topic such as flowers, and it will show how they can find flowers nearby, videos about flowers, news about flowers, discussion groups about flowers, alerts for flowers and so forth. It’s an effective display of Google’s growing number of services available.

If users are feeling silly or juvenile — as suggested by the New York Times — they can get a kick out of results for “explore poop in 3D” (there is a picture of a turd) and “photos of poop” (a picture of a dog doing its business on a lawn).

What do you love? Tell Google.

Google quietly rolled out a site this week that lets users tell it what they “love” and produces the results via its array of services, from mapping to online videos.

Users can fill in a box under the question “What do you love?” with a topic such as flowers, and it will show how they can find flowers nearby, videos about flowers, news about flowers, discussion groups about flowers, alerts for flowers and so forth. It’s an effective display of Google’s growing number of services available.

If users are feeling silly or juvenile — as suggested by the New York Times — they can get a kick out of results for “explore poop in 3D” (there is a picture of a turd) and “photos of poop” (a picture of a dog doing its business on a lawn).

What do you love? Tell Google.

Google quietly rolled out a site this week that lets users tell it what they “love” and produces the results via its array of services, from mapping to online videos.

Users can fill in a box under the question “What do you love?” with a topic such as flowers, and it will show how they can find flowers nearby, videos about flowers, news about flowers, discussion groups about flowers, alerts for flowers and so forth. It’s an effective display of Google’s growing number of services available.

If users are feeling silly or juvenile — as suggested by the New York Times — they can get a kick out of results for “explore poop in 3D” (there is a picture of a turd) and “photos of poop” (a picture of a dog doing its business on a lawn).